From last Monday
till this one, I brainstormed, researched, took notes, wrote possible
scenarios and then two chapters of The Sequel to my novel, A Journey of
Choice. Was I tired!
Spent! But I needed a subject for a different project. Where would I find it? In this mess I call an office?
Serendipitously, while going through sheets of old
paper looking for some to print on the back—I found. . . I found . . . an orange
sheet to which a yellowed newspaper article was clipped. The date was October
8, 2000.
The
article was the “Arkansas Traveler” column by Charles Allbright. The headline
read, “Last (but not least) names,” and the first words of the article were PAT
LASTER TAUGHT SCHOOL 27 years . . . .
Even
13 years ago, I was keeping a log of names.
Here,
without permission from either Mr. Allbright or the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
bigwigs, I’ll reprint it as it was.
“Pat
Laster taught school 27 years, then one day found herself running wild-eyed out
of her classroom, never to return. The devil helped her do it.
“'I’d
endured all the L. and A. I could take.' Lip and Attitude, from parents. A few
each semester can engage the world’s most hopeful profession in ongoing
dogfight.
“Pat
Laster believes that J. Gatling is not catching the same from parents in
Morrilton. She loves J.’s autumnal ritual of studying the names of his new
students in Morrilton High. Then sharing them, as lyrics for a hopeful
tomorrow.
“'I
hope Mr. G. can keep it up longer.'
“So.
How go Pat Laster’s days?
“'In
the quiet of my mornings with only the fan’s whir and the calico’s purr, I take
names, too. Mostly from the obituaries in newspapers.' Special names? None can
be more special. Names of those who died. Their loved ones. Their pallbearers.
Their preachers. Most are at the far end of Mr. Gatling’s life songs.
“And
what will Pat Laster do with her houseful of special names? Why, put them in
her novel, of course. Maybe employing the begat format. Or Faulkner’s stream of
consciousness. Somebody said Requiem for a Nun went 42 pages before
encountering its first period. No, no, not your antebellum kind of period. The
punctuation mark that ends a sentence. We will be checking this for truth. For
one thing, we love the book. For another, true or untrue, where will you find a
better example of a mind’s running dolefully amok?
“With
deepest respect, Pat Laster enters names from the newspapers in her journal.
These are Arkansas names:
“Orbin.
Drue. Chane. Dyka. Chelese. Phala. Waldine. Dibrell. Bobara. Destine. Lucchese.
Delta. Dakota. Homerleen. Vileras. Duard. Dax. Malderine. Timber. Nela. Delbra.
Kendyl. Reck. Lapria. Shanny. Odd.
“It
never occurred to B. F. Allbright that his name was, well, unusual. Brice
Fount. Get outta here. We once asked his mother, Grandma Allbright, where’d
that combination of names come from. Grandma was then in her 97th
year, not in full possession of her communicating skills. She was in absolute
possession of a mouthful of Rooster snuff. It could have been three weeks later
when she answered:
“'Why’nt
you go ask his daddy?'
A
challenge. His daddy died when Brice Fount was 7. Took pneumonia, Thomas Finley
Allbright did, trying to save his school from being destroyed by fire. But it
was gone. So was he. Up in Valley Springs, near Harrison, you’ll find a stone
building identified as Allbright Hall. The granddad we never knew.
“Not
bragging here. Just pointing out, not everybody with this family name was a
lightweight columnist.
“But
back to Pat Laster and her collection of names in Arkadelphia.
“The
surnames are likewise interesting: Box. Roach. Strain. Kindsfather. Thesaurus.
Hum. Peeks. Bear. Sink. Cotton. Fang. Jobs. Said. Smellback. Hamlet. Pouncey.
Bottoms. Boatenhammer. Winbush. Carrier. Grooms. Looms. Lawman. Woodring.
Battle. France. Johndroe. Whitehouse. Swindle. Hutchcraft.”
Pat,
here. I was amazed to re-read this. Charles Allbright—I think—is still around,
and reading about him is, well, nostalgic. Well worth the effort to look him up.
5 comments:
I love that you ran upon this old column and what he wrote about you. How cool is that! Some of those names are priceless. I expect I'll be seeing several in your future work. Good job!
Cool, indeed, and this many years hence. Thanks for responding. xoxo
Enjoyed the article, Pat. We have a Whitehouse in our church, and Hutchcraft runs an auction in Damascus.
I always loved Albright's column but had not seen this one.
I wish I could/would stop collecting names, but I just can't. Thanks for adding to my information. xoxo
very interesting group of names indeed!
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